4.5 Article

Catheter-Based Medical Device Biofilm Ablation Using Histotripsy: A Parameter Study

Journal

ULTRASOUND IN MEDICINE AND BIOLOGY
Volume 49, Issue 9, Pages 2152-2159

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.ultrasmedbio.2023.06.010

Keywords

Ablation; Bacteria; Biofilms; Catheter-associated infections; Histotripsy

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Biofilm formation in medical catheters is a major concern for hospital-acquired infections. This study investigates the potential of using histotripsy to remove biofilms from catheters at increased speeds and efficiency. The results show significant improvements in biofilm removal and bacterial killing speeds compared to previous methods, indicating the promise of histotripsy for clinically relevant treatment.
Objective: Biofilm formation in medical catheters is a major source of hospital-acquired infections which can pro-duce increased morbidity and mortality for patients. Histotripsy is a non-invasive, non-thermal focused ultra-sound therapy and recently has been found to be effective at removal of biofilm from medical catheters. Previously established histotripsy methods for biofilm removal, however, would require several hours of use to effectively treat a full-length medical catheter. Here, we investigate the potential to increase the speed and effi-ciency with which biofilms can be ablated from catheters using histotripsy.Methods: Pseudomonas aeruginosa (PA14) biofilms were cultured in in vitro Tygon catheter mimics and treated with histotripsy using a 1 MHz histotripsy transducer and a variety of histotripsy pulsing rates and scanning methods. The improved parameters identified in these studies were then used to explore the bactericidal effect of histo-tripsy on planktonic PA14 suspended in a catheter mimic.Results: Histotripsy can be used to remove biofilm and kill bacteria at substantially increased speeds compared with previously established methods. Near-complete biofilm removal was achieved at treatment speeds up to 1 cm/s, while a 4.241 log reduction in planktonic bacteria was achieved with 2.4 cm/min treatment.Conclusion: These results represent a 500-fold increase in biofilm removal speeds and a 6.2-fold increase in bacte-rial killing speeds compared with previously published methods. These findings indicate that histotripsy shows promise for the treatment of catheter-associated biofilms and planktonic bacteria in a clinically relevant time frame.

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